Rethinking Child Protection
The Centre has over 20 years of experience in child protection research and has developed an extensive portfolio of cutting-edge research. Much of this work has been conducted in projects working closely with policy and practice partners. Current research priorities focus on Rethinking Child Protection, Politics of Child Protection and Social Work, Child Care Policy and Practice, Adoption, Fathering, Parental Support, Child Neglect and Abuse, Social Work Education, the experiences of Children Looked After and Leaving Care, Welfare Inequalities; Child and parents living apart.
Current and recent research projects
Domestic Abuse and Child Protection (2022-24) Nuffield Foundation, partnership between Sheffield (PI), Huddersfield and Kingston Universities, Safe Lives and Research in Practice (Contact: B.M.Featherstone@hud.ac.uk)
Evaluating Models of care, best practice and care pathways for women who are dependent on drugs (2022-24) NIHR, Led by Kings College London, (Contact: B.M.Featherstone@hud.ac.uk)
Review of Children’s Services Formulae research project. DCLG, (2017-2019) with LG Futures, (Paul Bywaters, Co-I)
Identifying and understanding the link between system conditions and welfare inequalities in statutory children’s social care services. Nuffield Foundation, (2018-20) (Paul Bywaters, Co-I)
Child welfare inequalities project (2015-2017) Nuffield Foundation with Universities of Coventry (lead), Cardiff, Nottingham, Queens Belfast, Stirling & Edinburgh. Project aim was to establish child welfare inequalities as a core concept in policy making, practice and research in the UK and internationally. The project has had major impacts with policymakers in all four countries of the UK and Ofsted including the development of joined up policies across government departments, changes in local authority policies in relation to supporting families in poverty, changes in the data collected by Ofsted and changes to mapping of area-level deprivation and its links with child protection practices.
(PI: P.Bywaters@hud.ac.uk; Co-I: B.M.Featherstone@hud.ac.uk)
The Role of the social worker in adoption, (2016-2018) British Association of Social Work, combined research methods with public forms of enquiry including calls for evidence and hearings to maximise their outreach and stimulate public debate. As such, it attracted a great deal of political and professional attention.
(PI: B.M.Featherstone@hud.ac.uk)
National evaluation of the de-Institutionalisation of children’s care in Bulgaria (2012-2021) Oak Foundation, with The Know How Centre for Alternative Care, Bulgaria (Project lead). Now in its third phase and using an action research approach using findings working with key partners to influence a shift in thinking to inform child care reform to inform child care reform. This has involved dialogue with key stakeholders including Coalition for Childhood 2025, and National and International partners to preventing the chaotic placement of children and influence change in the law concerning the function of small group homes for children. Contact: B.Percy-Smith@hud.ac.uk
Publications and research outputs:
Please visit research profiles for: Brid Featherstone, Kate Wood, Paul Bywaters
Current & recent PhD projects
• The care system and education: A phenomenological approach to care leavers' experiences of university, Belinda Bluff
• Excluded from fatherhood: How do young men of the British care system experience parenthood? Elizabeth Gilmartin
• An inquiry into the contextual barriers to the process of deinstitutionalisation of childcare in Bulgaria, Evgenia Ivanova
• Exploring the use of coaching in child protection, Suzanne Triggs
• Domestic Abuse and Child Protection: A intersectional approach, Greig Ferguson
• Birth mothers’ understandings of mental distress, Siobhan Beckwith
• Exploring staff perceptions of young people in Secure Children’s Homes, Paula Phillips
• Black children, skin, hair and social work, Zoe Thomas